Steve Litchfield gets to grips with the first version of Opera Mini that will work for everyone. And he means everyone. This proxy-based browser solution should benefit people with any PDA or smartphone in any country in the world. And all for free.
With WirelessIRC not receiving regular updates on Series 60, and a lack of native clients on other devices, Ewan's been looking at a Java-based alternative for IRC access and finds it in JmIRC.
Steve gets to grips with the first Symbian OS media player to handle Windows Media Audio music files. Is MP3 now officially dead? Is Ogg Vorbis now officially too difficult? The jury's still out...
Classic management strategy is to form something, and then (brain)storm it to improve the product. With the N-Series phones, Nokia is clearly out of the forming stage and into the storming. With the N90, a design team has sat down and decided to make the best camera phone possible. Have they succeeded?
After going through an amazingamount of hassle to get one, Thomas Boys has a close look at Panasonic's 2nd Series 60 offering and asks, is it any good?
Announced at Symbian's recent Smartphone Show, the Nokia E60 Business Smartphone looked to be the dullest of the lot, a standard candybar phone with all the usual bells and whistles. But it looks like a little corker. Ewan Spence finds out more.
The Bluetooth Virtual Keyboard (VKB) is a very unusual device - it projects a laser image onto any flat service to be used as a keyboard. It's very futuristic and certainly designed to be impressive. Does it actually work though and does it work well?